According to the Mail online Tuesday "Foreigners entering Britain 'were not routinely checked for convictions at the time Alice Gross' Latvian killer came to UK'.

A huge police investigation was launched in the UK after 14-year-old Alice Gross went missing on August 28, 2014.She was caught on CCTV as she crossed a bridge in London, and minutes later Latvian builder Arnis Zalkalns, 41, was caught on the same camera.

He was cycling along the same canal bridge in the same direction Alice was walking. Alice was never seen alive again.

On September 30, 2014, the body of Alice was found hidden close to where she went missing.

A great deal of effort had been made to conceal her body in London's River Brent.

Police issued a statement days later after finding the body of a man in undergrowth in the vicinity. A man's body was found in dense woodland Boston Manor Park, near Hanwell, west London.

Police said that early indications were that the badly decomposed body was Zalkalns, although that is not officially confirmed. The family of Alice have been informed.

When Alice went missing social media joined in the search posting messages and asking celebrities to join in the 'find Alice' campaign.

A week after she vanished Arnis Zalkalns also went missing.

Police later revealed that Arnis was a convicted murderer; he served jail time in his native Latvia in the 1990s. His victim was his wife at that time. Zalkalns killed her and buried her body in a forest following a row about her sexuality. He brutally bludgeoned and stabbed his wife Rudite to death.

In 2014 we commented "The offence presumably did not bar Zalkalns as a Latvian resident from entering the UK or living here, such is the European Union. He took up residence in the UK in 2007. Police during the search for Gross claimed there was no record in the UK of the murder in Latvia. PM David Cameron added his voice to concerns that a convicted murderer could seemingly easily enter, work and live in the UK."

BBC News reported "Prime Minister David Cameron said he will examine "all the circumstances of the case" surrounding the murder of Alice. He described it as a "horrific case", and said: "Anyone with a daughter will have just felt sickened by what has happened and what that poor family has had to go through"."

Well I have news for you Mr Cameron - you do not need a daughter to be sickened by the murder of Alice.

Zalklns has a daughter who was understandably upset and shocked that her father was the prime suspect in this case.

All you need to be sickened by the killing of young Alice Gross is a heart and to be a decent human being.

The media had been well versed on that Sunday night. Much of it was on Twitter with some of the usual suspects feeding a constant stream of drivel to the world

Opinion: Monday morning Labour resignations continue.

The timing of a well-planned and coordinated Labour coup is appalling.

But it seems having waited since Corbyn was elected September 12, 2015, for a perfect time to try to oust Corbyn MPs believe now is the time.

The Tory Party are in dissarray, their leader has resigned, the fall out from the European Referendum continues but Labour opt to fight each other.

Monday the Tory Cabinet met behind closed doors. They continue to show party unity. They know the country is in a precarious position with some people feeling vulnerable and they know the world is watching.

They left the cabinet meeting in a calm and dignified manner.

They have been advised well.

​Their actions make Labour look like a rabble.

Labour MPs are using social and mainstream media to coordinate their resignations hoping to force Jeremy Corbyn to resign.

Some of the usual suspects, those who were quick to dump Ed Miliband in 2015 and showed a phoney hand to Gordon Brown, are working hard to oust Corbyn.

Many of them do not want to be party leader and can you blame them?

At time of writing Mr Corbyn has said he is going nowhere.

But as more and more Labour MPs resign his position will soon be untenable.

Their aim is to withdraw goodwill, sit on the backbenches, do little, watch Corbyn fall and still take their fat salary and extras from posting in the mainstream media and more.

Caring, compassionate socialists to the end.

The likes of John Woodcock claim that Corbyn does not have broad appeal. He too is using social media to undermine Corbyn's leadership. When I asked him politely about this on Twitter Sunday he blocked me. I tweeted him that I am a 64 year old woman who lives in the North of England and hails from working class stock-just the sort of person he claims Corbyn does not appeal to.

But the die is cast and all he could do was block me.

The aim of these MPs is to oust Jeremy Corbyn and replace him with a right-wing of Labour leader and cabinet.

A few names such as Lisa Nandy, Steven Kinnock and Dan Jarvis are in the mix.

None appeal to me.

Labour's Deputy leader Tom Watson as predicted on Twitter Sunday night by those being fed information from the plotters is looking to step in as temporary party leader until a new leader is elected.

They are hoping to prevent Mr Corbyn standing for election again.

Here are a few points worth noting

National Executive Committee elections will be held soon

If the right-wing of Labour get enough candidates elected they will try their best to oust Corbyn if he is still in post

Will they be able to push through rule changes affecting who gets a leadership vote?

The Labour Party conference will be held in September

That is when they will hope to announce a new leader

Last year some joined the party at a cut down price of £3

How many fairly recent party members have not renewed their memberahip?

Plotters also claim a general election is on the cards and Mr Corbyn could not win but surely it is never about just one person?

All of the above could impact on a leadership race.

This morning as I write a key player in the shadow Cabinet Angela Eagle has tendered her resignation.

I wrote to my MP Alan Johnson Friday as news of a coup spread but he has yet to reply. His silence could be telling.

After EU in / out referendum polls close 10pm GMT Thursday there will be a rush to return the first official figures and if it runs true to form Sunderland could be the first to post the results of the referendum locally.

Some regions will take much longer and final results may not be available until Friday morning.

However sometime in the wee small hours of Friday morning we should all know whether the majority of the electorate in the UK has voted to stick with the European Union or quit.

The second option will leave a range of issues unresolved and an exit would take time.

Check back later and as always we will try to post the results as they come in.

​First result in and it is from Gibraltar - 19,322 Remain and 832 Leave. The turnout was 84%.

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